Capra Tacita is a sacred whisper in a world too loud. Within these pages lives Pastafar, a gentle, unseen goat goddess of peace who cannot be heard, seen, or found, but who offers the healing power of forgetting. Through poems, parables, prayers, and quiet stories, this book invites those weighed down by anger, grief, and fear to lay down their burdens and find stillness. Rooted in silence and softened by the yellow light of Melloria, Capra Tacita is not a book of answers or commandments, but a sanctuary for the broken and the weary. It teaches that peace comes not from clinging to memory or justice, but from surrendering into the balm of absence and forgiveness. For seekers of solace, those who walk hard roads, and anyone longing for a gentle quiet, this collection is a companion, a prayer, and a promise: in forgetting, we are made whole. Here are a few reviews both positive and negative: Charles W., Poet and Mystic "Capra Tacita is a rare jewel—a text that doesn’t just ask you to believe, but invites you to feel the quiet spaces between suffering and peace. Its gentle voice stays with me long after the last page." Charles M., Spiritual Counselor "This book is a balm for fractured souls. The gentle mythology of Pastafar offers a new way to forgive ourselves through forgetting. It’s subtle, profound, and deeply healing." Charles R., Scholar of Religious Studies "An innovative and haunting collection that challenges traditional notions of divinity and scripture. ‘Capra Tacita’ is an essential read for anyone seeking solace beyond dogma." Charles J., Retired Prison Chaplain "I shared parts of this book with men in my care. The silence, the softness, the slow unspooling of pain—it gave them a way to breathe again. This text is needed in the hardest places." Charles L., Independent Publisher "Elegant, mysterious, and quietly powerful. The way this book folds absence and presence into a single thread is masterful. ‘Capra Tacita’ is a gift to all who have known loss. Charles D., Traditional Theologian "I find this work too vague and evasive. It offers little in the way of concrete guidance or doctrine, and its insistence on ‘forgetting’ feels like an abdication of responsibility." Charles S., Literary Critic "While beautifully written, ‘Capra Tacita’ sometimes feels deliberately obscure. The mythos is elusive to the point of frustration, making it difficult to connect with on a practical level."